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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  January 15, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PST

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sensation with facial expresses during press conference. everyone talking about the intense look in his eyes. jillian: scary. todd: what i'm go to say is a first world problems. they should get some compensation from the government. because it is so tough being a jets fan and even their press conference. jillian: same thing with the browns. you could go on. todd: you could. jillian: have a good day. we have got to go. bye. >> happening right now, another caravan marched towards our southern border. >> there are signs that this may be even larger than the last. >> congress could fix this in five minutes if they wanted to. >> the war on cops escalating overnight. four law enforcement officers in two states shot in the line of duty. in texas, three deputies are hurt serving a search warrant. >> so with budget negotiations still dead locked, many congressional democrats treated themselves at&t san juan puerto rico. >> i don't know, maybe they're celebrating the shutdown. we have a priority. it's the safety of our nation.
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>> the president's pick for attorney general set to face lawmakers hours from now. william barr's nomination is already sparking controversy. the left suggesting that he could interfere with the mueller probe. >> clemson celebrating its national title at the white house. check this out with fast food. >> burger king, wendy's and mcdonald's. we have big macs, we have quarter pounders with cheese. we have everything that i like that you like. ♪ steve: president of the united states bringing food into the white house yesterday from the three major mcdonald's burger king and wendy's. look, the white house chefs apparently furloughed. and so he did the national thing he picked up the phone and called them. ainsley: he said melania, first lady and karen pence were going to make salad for them.
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them. those boys don't want salad. they want real food pizza and burgers. brian: i actually don't think. so those guys usually eat better than anybody else and told to stay away from fast food. ainsley: whatever they are doing, they are doing it right. steve: no kidding. brian: happy celebration back tout old days when people won championships and went to the white house to celebrate and came off without a hitch. ainsley: it was refreshing, wasn't it? steve: we will talk about that in a little while. right now two minutes after the top of the hour. ainsley: a fox news alert. another migrant caravan leaving honduras overnight. brian: hundreds of migrants on the move. smaller than usual. their goal to reach the u.s. steve: we have dispatched our own griff jenkins. is he live from honduras. griff, we have been talking about this caravan was going to start over the last couple days. it's on the way and headed our way, right? griff: yeah, it is, guys. good morning at 5:00 a.m. the social media advertising was 5:00 a.m. they would depart san pedro sula.
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>> right now it's a few hundred people. we will spin backwards. you can see behind us. this is a gentleman that is actually injured. is he still going to make this long arduous journey of more than 3,000 miles pretty much. when it's done you can see already what we saw in the first one. look across the street. they are starting to run across. they are going to go about 200 miles west across honduras and then 200 miles north through guatemala to get to the southern mexico border where mexican borders have said that they will be met with resistance if they try to cross illegally in to get to the u.s. border. as we are following this one to get to the u.s. border. though, we did speak with one of the migrants that was in the group of the caravan that left early yesterday in the pouring rain late yesterday afternoon. his name is moreno flores. i asked him whether he plans to try to come legally or illegally. here's what moreno flores told us.
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do you plan to cross legally into the united states or illegally? >> i don't know. >> they are worried criminals could come to the united states. united states. are you a criminal? >> no, no. i am good person because i have been living -- in the united states i can do work, garden in restaurants. i need one opportunity. griff: now, the thing about this caravan with the folks we talked to yesterday and the ones i spoke to early this morning as we continue to find our way through rain, mud already challenging trek and only gone about a quarter of a mile. i told them did they think they were going to get into the united states based on what they saw happened in the last caravan? the last caravan? and they said we heard a lot of people got. in however, president trump sending a strong message yesterday that they will not be let. in he is not backing down from building that wall.
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here's the president. >> they are forming a new caravan in honduras. we need strength. right now we have weakness. i said i will build the wall and i'm going to build the wall. i will never ever back down. >> and, of course, the embassy here in honduras putting out a message on twitter saying false promises don't believe the caravan organizers because you will not get into the u.s. just for work. that's what's going on here, guys, as we set out for a very long and dangerous journey with this caravan. steve: indeed. griff, i was reading a foxnews.com story about this new caravan. it sounds like this one is different because. so people in this caravan of 500 are already pleading with shop owners for food and water. i know last time there seemed to be some coordination where there were food and water supplies waiting for people along the way.
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>> they're trying to get some assistance, some coordination based on the number of people i have spoken to so far. normally they are run, organized here by people that have been deported by the u.s. that know the route. the people we talked to yesterday that that category said that one thing they are worrying about is not only supplies, but also to make sure that they are autonomous. meaning they pick up their trash and don't cause problems or crimes or smoke weed which we saw or really use the bathroom in the public, which had really upset the small mexican towns on the journey that they typically have been doing for years. they were so large last time they really upset the balance. they are trying to correct that this time. steve: griff jenkins, on the road as the caravan heads north from honduras. ainsley: many people want to know exactly who is coming into the country and they want that wall. but, when you see those images it just pulls at your
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heart strings. you see these dads carrying their babies. they have a long journey. some of them without strollers. lenktly know who is coming in. griff was speaking to the farmers. i want to keep the criminals and suspected tastes out. if your farm ares are here illegally i want to protect them and make sure that they are safe and that they can stay in the country. brian: the problem is compare them not to these people need help. obviously they need a break. there is people all around the world that need help and need a break. there is people in the united states who are on the streets need a break and there is veterans who cannot get the money they have and already being taxed extremely heavily. you really have to compare this to americans who are here already who are paid into the social system and know that we can't possibly take care of everyone. if you want to speed up the refugee process. if you want to streamline it one thing that would certainly help, if we didn't
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have a shutdown. because of the shutdown our embassy is basically shutdown. you basically get a voice recording to find out about refugee status and what is happening with the government trying to stop this caravan. steve: not as if they are actually listening. our government said look, if they picked up the phone embassy. look there is a process have you got to follow it obviously these people are not following it there is a quinnipiac poll that essentially supports what the president has been saying all along for about the last month. that is 54% of you according to quinnipiac say yes, there is a crisis at our southern border. 43% say no. 4% don't know. to support the fact that the president is completely dug in on this. "the washington post" poll suggested everybody blames the president for the shutdown.
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that's one of the facts in it. the other is 80% of the people who responded to the "the washington post" poll said i haven't been impacted at all. i have been not inconvenienced at all about the shutdown. brian: mentioned that yesterday. 28% to be specific. so far if you weren't in houston or miami you were not inconvenienced on sunday. but it's beginning to lengthen things already and saw what happened at the white house yesterday. amazing so little separates the two sides yet the standoff has now hit record levels 25 days. ainsley: seems like it could be an easy fix if they would come to the table and agree come to the table and agree to some sort of negotiation. one of the angel moms marianne mendosa we have interviewed her a bunch. when she hears nancy pelosi talk about being a manufactured crisis, what she is doing is a slap in our faces and a kick to our loved one's grave. you will never know how hurtful that is to our angel families. steve: clearly the president is dug.
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in i'm going to do everything i can to keep america safe. but, at the same time, nancy pelosi says absolutely no chance i'm going to give a nickel for that what you wall. i was talking to a guy who has voted democratic his entire life in new jersey yesterday. he said i can't believe that she is not even willing to sit across the table and negotiate. that's why we send them to washington is to figure out how to do stuff. but when you are completely inflexible, what's going to happen? it looks like the president probably is going to stay dug in as long as she is dug in. somebody is going to have to blink u. brian: 10 minutes after the top of the hour. you hear this term toxic somebody is going to have to masculinity, blame men that's what you break it down to, gillette, which is known as a making mostly men's products and certainly when it comes to men's shaffers, they decided to take a huge risk and they are getting backlash for it let's watch this ad and tell me what you think. >> we believe in the best of men. men. >> men need to hold other
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men accountablable. >> come on. >> to say the right thing, to act the right way. >> not cool. >> some already are. but some is not enough. >> that's not how we treat each other, okay? >> because the boys watching today will be the men of tomorrow. steve: okay. this ad comes out just a couple of days after the american psychological association said that traditional masculinity is harmful to society. so they have come out with this ad on the heels of that probably unrelated. and as brian said, there is some blow back. ainsley: i thought it was a wonderful ad. i thought it was men holding each other accountable. there was a dad in there with his daughter telling her she can be strong and basically the message was you can be anything you want to be. i thought it was a beautiful message. i'm a woman though. we need to ask you guys
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because it's targeted to you. who are the people that go into the stores and buy these things. it's basically women, right? it's probably smart. brian: i think men buy steve: there are ladies razors, too. brian: if you want to get a man to buy it, it's like to me in a way showing a man breaking into a house knocking over the furniture and stealing the money out of the safe and saying let's stop this bad behavior, buy my razor. point out all the bad things you might say about men, put them into an ad, make men feel horrible and overpay for a razor because it's so hard to match the handle you have anyway you end up buying the whole unit. steve: shaving is a gender construct no. one should do it. stop buying razor blades. chuck woolery tweeted i would like to thank gillette
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for reminding me how horrible it is to be a man. this should sit well with your customers. not. ainsley: that wasn't my take away. watch the entire ad. my take away was holding men accountable. teaching you how to have nice manners and treat women with mistake. brian: no wrong take away unless you are gillette. if you watch the 60 second ad men acting badly and solve the whole problem by acting differently. steve: we have a panel on it a little later on. if you watched it, email us what do you think? friends@foxnews.com. meanwhile, president trump says democrats will not include daca in negotiations for the border wall. our next guest is a legal daca recipient and says the president has a moral duty to build the wall. ainsley: it wasn't tough for these police officers. the snow day video gone viral ♪ good, good, good ♪ good to be alive right now
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border security. the president tweeting democrats are saying that daca is not worth it and won't -- don't want to include it in talks. many hispanics will be coming over to the republican side. watch. his prediction may be right because our next guest is a daca recipient and agrees that a wall would work. so, why joining us right now from scottsdale, arizona daca recipient alario. good morning to you. >> happy new year. good to see you again. steve: refresh folk's memory how did you come to this country. >> i came here when i was a year old. my mom brought me here through no fault of my own. i couldn't make my own decision. i grew up undocumented. i grew up homeless. i have grew up without a father and rough neighborhood. it was my conservative values that made me who i am today. as a result i'm a first generation college graduate. i have an incredible job as well. well. pay taxes.
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steve: right. exactly. you have have status in this country through daca. i'm sure your mind would be put to rest if they finally come to a solution. right now, regarding daca, the main topic is the wall. and what do you think about president trump's demand that democrats come back to the table and negotiate for wall funding? >> look, i agree with the president. i talk to hun dreads and thousands of dreamers. i think we are all in agreement that safety is -- should be our number one priority. i think the president has every right to do that. i think when he became president his first mission and priority was to protect the american people and, you know, the dreamer community, you know, many of them hundreds and thousands that i speak to, you negotiation agree that the president is doing the right thing but, at the same time we need to make a deal happen with congress. steve: right. it seems right now the sticking point is nancy pelosi. she has said nope, not going
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to give you a nickel for that wall. if you could talk through the television to nancy pelosi, as a dreamer, what would you say? >> well, what i would say is that enough is enough. i think it's time for us to not to come together as democrats or republicans but as americans. we need to put the american people first and put certainty for the dreamers once and for all. steve: sure. so you you would like to ultimately see a deal for the dreamers, right? >> i think that's the best solution right now for both parties. and i think if anyone is against a compromise or against a deal, then they don't want to see the president succeed or america succeed. and then, also, they don't want to bring certainty for the dreamers as well. steve: it sounds like you say it's all politics right now. >> > at the end of the day, the shutdown is getting worse and worse by the minute. i think we need to come together and i think there is an urgency to come
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together for us so the american people can win at the end of the day u. steve: let's see what happens at the end of the day. hill layerio yen nez, thank you for joining us live from arizona. >> thank you, steve. have a great day. steve: you too. meanwhile senator bob menendez calling out fox news after that video of him went viral. we are live with him in puerto rico with a confrontation with the senator. to look at me now, you don't see psoriasis.
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ask your dermatologist amazon prime video so when you say words like... show me best of prime video into this... you'll see awesome stuff like this. discover prime originals like the emmy-winning the marvelous mrs. maisel... tom clancy's jack ryan... and the man in the high castle. all in the same place as your live tv. its all included with your amazon prime membership. that's how xfinity makes tv... simple. easy. awesome. steve: democrats are defending their trip to puerto rico during the partial government shutdown over the weekend. brian: what a nice overhead shop shot. senator bob menendez is not impressed with this photo on the beach making its rounds.
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rob schmitt is on day 25 of the shutdown. you had a chance to see senator menendez with a shirt on. rob: with a suit on. and as we have been saying, this has been the kind of a workplace thing. there have been a lot of meetings and a lot of work is needing to be done down here. a lot of people are talking about this winter retreat that more than 30 democrats came to on a private charter they got put up in a fancy hotel. they got to bring their families. the food was all taken care of. it was very fancy. there is a lot to talk about here in puerto rico. they had a devastating hurricane in 2017. they have been living well beyond their means for a long time. that debt needs to be managed better. that was the discussion down here. but, there was also in addition to those meetings a lot of leisure time we caught bob menendez the new jersey senator on the beach and then we caught up with him yesterday in a suit. he didn't want to talk to us. take a listen. >> could have had hours and hours and hours of meetings. [inaudible] >> i want to be fair. i just want to ask you.
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>> you are near fair nor balanced. rob: we do want to fair to senator menendez, there were hours of meetings yesterday before their flight. they did six hours on sunday. we did talk to congressman from california tony car cardinas he was more than happy to defend coming down here amidst the government shutdown. >> important to understand yes a shutdown is going on in washington. as you can see people are living and thriving and trying to survive here and it's our job to come here, touch, feel, and understanding what puerto rico has been going through. rob: that's what they are doing down here. again, more than a hundred lobbyists here and the optics of it not so sure it looked too good amidst the shutdown with a lot of people not getting their paycheck. steve: no doubt about it. it did not look good. just saying. rob, thank you very much. live from puerto rico. brian: ainsley. ainsley: thank you, brian. it has been a year since
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america's pastor, that's hard to believe reverend billy graham passed away. his life touched so many of us around the world. us around the world. to honor the legacy of the great billbilly graham. redeemed. devotions for the longing soul. joining us now to reflect on his grandfather's life and legacy is william graham, billy graham's grandson. thank you so much for being here. it's so honored to sit next to you. i heard your grandfather speech little girl university of south carolina. >> i was there for that one. john j cash was there. ainsley: that's exactly right. johnny cash was there i didn't know who johnny cash was. my parents had to explain it to me. your grandfather touched so many people and still touching so many people through your family and your books. why did you write this? >>ing it god had laid on my heart a long time ago when i was actually pastor ago church in raleigh, north carolina. for a long time god just never -- i said gave me permission to write the book it wasn't just the right time. and last year god said it's
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now time to write. and so i started writing this peculiar that i had been working on for a long time. it's just some things that i have come across in life, things i have witnessed from my grandfather. things that the scripting has spoken to me. and things i have seen all around the world. i just wanted to share with people. so biblical lessons i have learned in life. ainsley: like johnny cash who went to prison and he was redeemed and found the lord. you write about stories like that in your book. you talk about a verse that continuously came to your mind when you were writing the book. >> it did. a bible verse the first time i remember hearing it was from my secretary, my assistant. and she read this first one said psalm 107-9 for he satisfies the longing soul and fills the hungry soul with goodness. that's what god does. we all have longing hearts, longing souls looking for more in life yet he fills us with his goodness. not the world's goodness but his goodness. that's what really satisfies our longing souls. that's the reasonable for
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the title of the book. i think it's just a verse that resonates with some people in this world. ainsley: it really does. when you travel around the world. you probably hear we are all longing. there has got to be more than, this right? we all have pain and suffering. the older we get there is more and more of that what's your message to those out there that are hurting. >> god can change your life. he can really change your life. it doesn't matter what you are going through how angry and bitter you are, god still has a plan and purpose for your life. you must surrender your life. not just commit. commit you can take away, make a commitment, commit, uncommit. but when you surrender then you are giving your life over to jesus christ and saying you are in control of your life. ainsley: much easier. i remember did i not want to do it. when i finally did it, god changed my life in a miraculous way and life was much easier then i can just say whatever your will is, you lead. >> that's right. and now we have purpose in life. we have meaning in life. we have joy.
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even when we go through bad we have joy. things we still have joy. ainsley: that's true. >> that's what this world could use a lot more of joy when we follow christ. >> when did you realize who your grandfather was? >> i was a young boy in elementary school. it was about kindergarten. teacher coming up and said this is billy graham's grandson. how did she know who my granddaddy was? i didn't know my grand daddy was famous. i thought he was just grand dad. we called him daddy bill that was our name for grandfather. that was probably the first time. i didn't realize the impact of my grandfather until i got to liberty university. i started to realize how vast. i knew he was famous and impact around the world but the vastness of his impact was felt when i was at liberty university. ainsley: you shared in the book an image that you saw your grandfather preaching. you wanted to run up to him. surrounded by a bunch of people. you have wanted to get through the crowd your grand daddy didn't realize how famous. the security guard said no, son-in-law you need to get in line.
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he reaches his arms out when he sees you. >> hotel speaking at a convention. long line of people u i knew people were wanting to see him. i understood that part. i was going to wait until there was a break and run up there he took time to rec me and give me a hug. ainsley: oh, gosh. i would love just one more day with my grand daddy. thank you for sharing these wonderful stories u god bless you. ahead some claim marijuana a harmless drug, turns out even using it once can have an impact on your health. shocking new study coming up next. fast food feast for the national thanks. the clemson tigers chowing down at the white house thanks to president trump ♪ because i'm happy ♪ clap along ♪ if you feel that happiness is the truth ♪ because i'm happy ♪ clap along ♪ if you know your happiness is to you ♪ did you ever notice that the very first bite
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big macs? >?[ laughter ] >> we bought a thousand burger king, all-american companies, burger king, wendy's and mcdonald's. we have big macs, quarter pounders with cheese. we have everything that i like that you like. [laughter] i know no matter what you did there is nothing that you can have that's better than that. that's your shot of the morning. president trump with a fast food feast for the clemson tigers. brian: national champions celebrating at the white house second time in three years. they also sang god bless the u.s.a. ♪ there ain't no doubt ♪ i love this land ♪ god bless the u.s.a. ♪ steve: how great is that? apparently when the players walked in to the dining room and they saw they whooped they were so excited to see all that stuff. ainsley: they did. steve: we have our own fast food spread some of the foods the president brought out.
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the main difference is the fact that i don't know if you can really see this those images but out fries they took out of the sleeves from as you can see right there and put them into white house cups with the presidential insignia on the side. so i have a feeling that in addition to a fast food meal, pretty much every single one of those cups probably went home as a souvenir. ainsley: do you know what i love about this, too. so many things i love about this. this team is great from south carolina. it's actually my rival team but i still pull for them when they're not playing carolina. dabo was amazing. not supposed to be head coach. they put him in there to try him out a little bit. did he so well. got the job. started making money and pouring money back into the lives of other people. givings back to the community. his wife is amazing. he has three cute kids. he is just a wonderful representation of what south carolina is. and i'm so proud of him. but, what was also cool about this is the president is like a man of the people.
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he middle america loves him, right? he serving french fries in white house cups and pizza and hamburgers. that he was what the people like. brian: one thing about him is he very inspirational. i don't know if you heard the trent one of the biggest fans sadly suffering from a terminal illness and passed away. really adopted by a member of the team for the longest time. and his loss was really felt and that's what the coach brought up yesterday. >> we say all the time greatness is not your destiny. greatness is not your right. it's a decision. you know, we always say championships are won when the stands are empty. champions are made when nobody is watching. and this team, this team right here made a decision to be great. the whole college football world was captured by tyler trent. he was the purdue football fan battling cancer. he just passed just
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recently. and here's what he said. he put out a quote and he said though i am in hospice, though i'm in hospice care and have to wake up every morning know that the day might be my last, i still have a choice to make. to make that day the best it can be. yet, isn't that a choice we all have every day? after all, nobody knows the amount of days that we have left. some could say we are all in hospice to a certain degree. so why don't we act like it? in order for your some day to become a reality, you just got to be your best today. and truly enjoy the journey because i always believe the best is yet to come. steve: tyler trent living on in the words of the coach there and tyler's whole message is how to stay positive. there he is the purdue super fan. he inspired the nation to stay positive even though he
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did not know if that day was going to be his last. ainsley: they did a lot of features on him on espn. if you follow the sports world, you know who he is. but for those who don't, he is just such an inspiration. he died at 20 years old on january 1st, i believe. the doctors told him he had three months to live and two and a half months into that he said i'm so grateful to be alive. this is probably going to be my last christmas with my family. i'm grateful i'm able to buy presents for them. such an inspiration. god bless his family. steve: what do you think about the president serving a buffet of fast food to the clemson tigers national thanks. people on the internet are weighing in. friends@foxnews.com. we are also on facebook on this tuesday morning. ainsley: we have the best crew here. look at this. i got so excited when i came back upstairs. jillian. brian: they are observation sighted to eat this. so that will be great. jillian: smells so good. it's not even fair. jillian: oh my gosh. get you caught up on
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headlines now. you guys dig in for a minute. steve: will do. jillian: news to get to here and stuarting with a fox news alert. four law enforcement officers in two states shot in the line of duty. in texas, the search is on for a possible suspect after three deputies are hurt serving a search warrant. another suspect was shot dead and a third is in custody. in north carolina, three people under arrest after a state trooper is shot in the face. trooper daniel herrell attacked at traffic stop. is he in stable condition. the man accused of kidnapping 13-year-old jayme closs tells police he chose his victim after watching her board a school bus. prosecutors say jake patterson shot and killed jayme's parents and duct taped her mouth and stuck her in the trunk of a car. he says he didn't even know her name. after 88 days, jayme escaped miraculously when the kidnapper left wisconsin home. 911 calls just released from the moment she found help. >> and she said i am jayme closs? >> yes. she said he killed my
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parents. i want to go home. help me. so we're kind of scared because he might come. >> yep. >> so if the cops could get here soon as -- >> -- i have many deputies headed that wait a minute i'm going to keep you on the line. jillian: patterson is being held on $5 million bail. if convicted he could spend life in prison. she is a brave girl. teens using marijuana even once could be damaging their brains. a new study shows pot can impact young people's ability to process emotions, make memories and learn. the study looked at dozens of 14-year-old girls and boys across europe. one in three reported using marijuana at least once during their lifetime. police take matters into their own hands after getting a call about kids sledding in unsafe area. [laughter] >> we survived. >> officers, yeah, testing out the hill in indiana. they say it was for, quote.
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safety reasons and stuff. i think they just wanted to i think they just wanted to have some fun. i don't blame them. steve: head first always scares me. jillian: only live once. steve: look at this. the crew cleaned us out. brian: janice dean probably has most of the fast food with her no, janice? janice: fast food? no? who is paying. ainsley: we have a lot of it inside. after you do the weather come in we have pizza and cheese burgers. steve: you should watch this channel it's a good one. janice: it this will be the world's fastest forecast you have ever seen. here in new york city it's cold. we could get a whole bunch of snow by the week's end. look at those current temps. 26 in new york. 31 in sneans kansas city. wind chill even colder than that cold air is in place. the question is how much cold air is going to remain the question is how much cold air is going to remain in place when our next storm system moves in later this week. across california we could see the potential for flash flooding and heavy snow across the sierra, nevada, the mountains and enter
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mountain west. some of this energy combine with another storm system and that's going to make for a pretty big snow event, impactful one over the midwest, parts of the great lakes and northeast. this is saturday and then look what happens. boom! some of the interior sections of the northeast could get over 2 feet of snow in addition, we could see some ice as well. this is something we are going to have to monitor over the next couple of days. okay. here i come. steve: we have saved you a pizza. come on in. ainsley: 43 minutes after the top of the hour. coming up, florida senator rick scott. devin nunes and nfl great benjamin watson all here live this morning. brian: few hours attorney general nominee william barr heads to the hill for another confirmation. this is most impactful. the judge says there is one issue that will take center stage, right, judge? ♪ on the street ♪ the heat is on. ♪ -we're doing karaoke later, and you're gonna sing.
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steve: 9:30 this morning senate confirmation hearings begin for president trump's pick to lead the department of justice william barr could reclaim the title as serves as attorney general under george herbert walker bush. >> barr says it is vitally important for mueller to continue his russia investigation but democrats are still expected to make his nomination pretty difficult. brian: all right. what can we expect? let's ask judge napolitano. he is the same judge who liberty file on fox nation is this going to be kavanaugh two? >> no. first of all this is not a lifetime appointment. a member of the president's cabinet. he serves force as long as donald trump is president and as long as donald trump wants him in that office. secondly, he has been there before. when he was the attorney general, as you just said in the intro under president george h.w. bush, he was establishment law and order, unremarkable, ethical, and
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had support on both sides of the aisle. the sole issue this morning is bob mueller. and in his statement that he is going to read, which he has already submitted under oath, he has said forget about what i have said about this before. as attorney general, i'm bob mueller's boss. but he is going to continue this investigation at his observe pace. i'i don't know how the democrats could reject that. steve: there is always a speed bump between a person and the confirmation. what would it be for this guy? guy? >> you know, they are probably going to try and do something because they don't like the person who nominated him. but this is about as establishment and bipartisan a nomination as you could expect from this president. brian: schumer pulled back yesterday. and also there is push to have him recuse himself because he wrote that memo saying should not be special counsel. don't get mad at me.
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>> i won't get mad at you. i love you. when rod rosenstein leaves there will be no number two person only number one the attorney general or deputy attorney general can be bob mueller's boss. one of them has to be his boss. there is no reason why bill barr can't be bob mueller's boss. he expressed some political opinions, excuse me, some legal opinions on some technical aspect of a law that's really kind of in the weeds. he says that's not going to interfere with the stewardship of the department. ainsley: tend, will hat the ende day, will he be confirmed. judge judge yes team. steve: two days. >> up to senator lindsey graham. says he wants to get it done in one. i think it will take two. the opposition to him is tepid. nobody is going to come in and said he did this when he was a freshman at yale. this is not going to be that kind of a hearing. brian: what about high school. >> i don't think they will go back that far. where did he go to high school did he go to massapequa.
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brian: i don't think so. steve: the barr exam starts this morning at 9:30. >> very clever. i'm going to use that with hemner a couple hours. check out the judge on fox nation liberty file. >> thank you. brian: remember the gang of eight on immigration? now there is a gang of 20. are they ready to make a deal to end the shutdown? i hope. so. steve: but would the president listen? it's back to the future. the north american auto show in detroit, michael caudill is there with throw back cars making a come back including a big mustang ♪ taking the my time on my ♪ - in a crossfit gym, we're really engaged
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steve: it is a super bowl for car lovers and happening today in detroit. ainsley: we are getting a sneak peek at the north american auto show. brian: mike is already there. he is the auto expert. he joins us with the coolest trends this year. mike caudill, take it away. >> good morning, guys, i have got to tell you day two of the media preview north american auto show in detroit. i'm really excited about this vehicle right here. talk about taking the bull by the horn. it's the all new ford explorer. this comes in ft and hybrid version. that st is the performance version. 400-horsepower under the hood. hybrid version get 500 miles of combined range built in chicago and the explorer is america's best selling suv of all time. so expect to see this awesome vehicle on the market in a very, very near future. all right. we want to talk a little bit about throw backs.
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the toyota supra was debuted yesterday and it's been 21 years since that coveted badge has been on the market. that red edition model will be one of 1500. they will sell here in the u.s. as part of a special edition. 143 miles per hour. it's meant for the track but also meant for the performance enthusiast to cruise around on the streets. look at it drifting right there. there. it's a fun car. a couple more for you. the nissan eb concept will be here at the auto show. it's a glimpse at the future. it will be autonomous, it will be electrified. they will hopefully bring this kind of design to the road in the near future with that vehicle right there. look at this one, this is the infinity concept. qx inspiration, massive wheels, electrified, autonomous. it will have coach doors and display on the interior of this vehicle. it's really wide with panorama and digital view with coach doors and massive screen. close it out with one
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vehicle right here. subaru stis 209 making its way here. exclusively to the united states. build on awesome racing platform. it's a manual transmission. meant to tw to go fast. guys, a lot of news here at the show. later today ford will make a big announcement in partnership with volkswagen. we will bring that to you as soon as we have more details on it. steve: fantastic. mike caudill live at the detroit international auto show. ainsley: beautiful cars there. steve: who knew subaru has a sports car. ainsley: i know. ford explorer takes you back. everyone had one of those when i was in high school. the parents did. steve: meanwhile straight ahead on this tuesday. florida senator rick scott in his first national interview as a senator is going to join us. congressman devin nunes towards the end of the show and benjamin watson. a busy tuesday on this "fox
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help people find their way. fastsigns designed new directional signage. and got them back on track. get started at fastsigns.com. ainsley: another migrant caravan leaving honduras overnight. >> i told them did they think they were going to get into the united states based on what they saw happened in the last caravan and they said we heard a lot of people got in. steve: meanwhile, president trump says democrats will not include daca in negotiations. >> the dreamer community, we're all in agreement that the president is doing the right thing but, at the same time, we need to mike a deal. >> the president's pick for attorney general set to face lawmakers hours from now. >> in his statement that he is going to read as attorney general, i'm bob mueller's boss but is he going to continue this investigation. >> the unemployment rate amongst veterans for the year 2018 is aten all-time low for post 9/11 vets we are seeing that fall below
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4% for the first time ever. >> clemson celebrating its national title at the white house. check this out with fast food. >> burger king, wendy's and mcdonald's. we have big macs, we have quarter pounders with cheese. we have everything that i like that you like. [laughter] ♪ ♪ steve: look at this halfway through the month of january already, it's tuesday, january 15th. ainsley: unbelievable. steve: 25 degrees in new york city and a storm is coming. ainsley: my mom's birthday is around the corner i have got to get a present. thanks for reminding me. steve: you are welcome. ainsley: a new migrant caravan leaves honduras overnight. brian: their goal to reach the united states. steve: griff jenkins joins us live from honduras where they set off a little while ago. griff, why do they start these caravan marches when it's still dark?
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>> well, they want to start, steve, because the sun gets very hot here. it's already 75 degrees. it's going to get into the 80's. the some comes out. you can look ahead of us and see the line of these folks. here's what so fascinating. when we talk with the government officials in san pedro sula where these start yesterday they said they are seeing already in the initial part of it a larger group than they had back in october when the last one started. that one was about 500. in its origin and turned into several thousand. we saw 500 or 600 migrants were in the rain and they decided to take off and start marching. what i'm in right now about 10 miles outside of the city. another 500. so those numbers we can safely say are at about 1,000 to 1100 that began in san pedro sula on the eastern caribbean side of honduras. they will go 200 miles west across honduras and get to
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the guatemala border and go another 200 miles north to the mexico, guatemala border. that's 400 miles where they are going to pick up a lot more people as they make their way towards mexico and then from the mexico, guatemala border another 2,000 to tijuana. we spoke to one of the migrants yesterday. moreno flores. i asked them about his trip and whether he plans to enter legally or illegally. here is what he said. >> do you plan to cross legally into the united states or illegally? >> i don't know. >> well, they are worried criminals could come to the united states. are you a criminal? >> no. no. no. i am good person because i have been living -- in the united states i can do work, garden, in the restaurant. i need one opportunity. griff: we find, talking to the people here, that there isn't a real organizer and we are also trying to find
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out really who is supporting and possibly funding this operation. it seems to be pretty much a grassroots group so far being led. it appears, by some people that have made the trip before. maybe been deported or are familiar with the route. one thing is for sure, another caravan is headed towards the u.s. now and it's as large as the last one and expected to grow, guys? steve: griff, i have a quick question for you as we can see more of the migrants filing past you, okay, the country of honduras is south of guatemala. so, between the united states and honduras you have mexico, obviously and guatemala. what's being done on the northern honduran border to keep those people from passing into guatemala? >> not much when you talk to the honduran folks here on the eastern side. it is more of a narcotrafficking and the migrants are afraid of that side of the northern honduran border. that's why they go all the
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way west and take the long way if you will because it is friendlier to migrants and they have been doing it for years to come. what's really going to be interesting to see what happens though is once they get to the mexico, guatemala border, steve, that is where the new mexican president lopez obrador says they are going to stop people from coming illegally into mexico and that is something, yet to be seen how this new administration handels things already. mexican officials coming to meet with honduran officials and guatemalaen officials to put the word out and, of course, president trump and the u.s. administration saying just like the last one you are not going to be let in just for a job. steve: griff jenkins live in honduras where he is estimating the caravan now is at 1,000 heading north. brian: what about a deal? when are we going to get a deal in place to stop the next caravan and they are obviously not getting the message once they get to the mexican border most of them are not getting through. moist of them are stuck and
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causing chaos in places like tijuana. the i question is do they want a bigger plan in washington? do they want to talk about having a pathway to citizenship for daca like they talked about almost a year ago today? where they were going to get 20 billion for the wall and then get daca recipients on a pathway to citizenship? now the courts have held that up so the democrats have very little interest in it. steve, you talked to a daca recipient last hour. steve: that's right. he actually came to the country when he was 1-year-old. he has protected status under daca right now which is being challenged in the courts. answered would like to see he feels the president should be able to build the wall and keep america safe. he would like to see the democrats do some dealing. >> i came here when i was a year old. and my mom brought me here. i grew up undocumented, homeless, without a father. rough neighborhood. it was my conservative values that made me who i am today.
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as a result i'm a first generation college graduate. and i have an incredible job and i have an incredible job i agree with the president and i talk to hundreds and thousands of dreamers. and i think we are all in agreement that, you know, safety should be our number one priority. i think if anyone is against a compromise or against a deal. then they don't want to see the president succeed or america succeed and then also they don't want to bring certainty for the dreamers as well. ainsley: there is a lot of democrats on democrats and republicans right now. some people are working without paychecks and some are furloughed and this has gone on so long. nancy pelosi and chuck schumer says we are not budging on this. no we are not giving you in i money for the wall. now getting pressure from daca recipients. do a deal and help us out. steve: then have you got ed rendell democrats over the last 20 years down in the great state of pennsylvania. he says essentially he is echoing what lindsey graham had said. the president should reopen the government. deal for a couple of weeks and then see what happens. listen to this.
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we should reopen the government for a three week period or month period and negotiate. try to make progress on some of the other issues that are involving immigration like doing something once and for all about the dreamers. legalizing their status, gives them a path to citizenship. i think if the president and membership mcconnell were willing to consider that i think the democrats would allow. allow. >> i think there is every reason. brian: lindsey graham brought that up. both senator warner as well as ed rendell and senator as ed rendell and senator graham brought up over the weekend. weekend. evidence said listen, do you want to declare a state of emergency? i get it it's a last resort. why don't do you, this mr. president. three and a half weeks. open up the government. three and a half weeks we will try to get some money on the wall. the problem is the president's backed off the wall. has talked about a steel barrier. talked about steel slats. has talked about improving fencing and digging beaten neath. however, nancy pelosi says not a dime for the barrier. not a dime for the wall. i think senator warner.
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senator manchin, chris coons, and others who are meeting in the gang of 20. ainsley: 10 democrats and 10 republicans. brian: say to pelosi, absolutely on the table u some type of barrier. after all, we already committed to 600 miles. steve: let's just examine the whole idea. so the president does what he says he is not going to do right now not going to reopen the government and then negotiate. let's say he does do that and he a says okay, i'm going to reopen the government and then he brings in the congressional leaders, do you really think nancy pelosi after that is going to give him any money? brian: she has got to feel pressure. she has to somehow before they do this she has to commit to being open to that barrier. because, if not, it's a nonstarter. receive. ainsley: they need to come to some sort of agreement a compromise. that's how you do a deal. that's what dan crenshaw is saying the newly elected democrat from texas. >> we should be negotiating u democrats said zero dollars for any kind of
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barrier on out border. weeks ago. and they are still at zero dollars. that's not negotiation. the president's plan was initially a long border wall. he has come down to about 234 miles of border wall. what we would like to see, again, is democrats coming to the table. highly reasonable solution and no reason why we can't solve it from congress. this should not be something that the executive himself has to solve. brian: tsa is suffering as well as the fda already feeling the heat as well as a lot of our border patrol working without paychecks. steve: right. accord ing to "the accord ing to "the washington post poll, 80% -- 82% of the u.s. population has not been inconvenienced by it meanwhile, have you got somebody who wrote anonymous op-ed for the daily caller and says i'm a senior trump official and i hope a long shutdown smokes out the resistance. remember that anonymous write his or her said i'm a senior member of the administration? i'm here frying to protect america from donald trump? well, this person takes a look at the shutdown and sees that a skinnier federal
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government is probably a step in the right direction they say. ainsley: saying the shutdown should be cut loose, an opportunity to strip wasteful government agencies and goes on to say the laps lape in appropriations more than a fight for the wall. if this fight is merely retore torque call bickering with nancy pelosi we all lose especially with the president. if it proves the government is better when smaller focusing only on essential functions that serve americans, then president trump will achieve something great that reagan was only bold enough to dream. steve: think about this. right now there are 350,000 government employees who are furloughed. there are 420,000 who have to report to work. currently the federal government is working, you know, in the estimation of this writer, is working pretty well with 350,000 people not working. is this a preview of coming attractions? this personal, whoever it is says that could probably be
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a better idea. he said 15% of he or she says -- 15% of government employees are exceptional patriots but 08% feel no pressure to produce results. brian: i think 70% of the american public, $1,000 in their savings and most live paycheck to paycheck. many of them are some of the 800,000 that are either furloughed or told to -- just told to come to work and not get paid. steve: sure. brian: definitely tough. steve: absolutely. our heart breaks for those people. that is a good reason why congress should say we have got to negotiate and nancy pelosi should be willing to negotiate rather than just say no. ainsley: maybe we will see something this week. we will keep you posted. hand it over to jillian who has headlines. jillian: four law enforcement officers in two states shot in the line of duty. in texas, the search is on for a possible suspect after three deputies are hurt serving a search warrant. another suspect was shot dead and third is in custody. all of the officers are
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expected to survive. in north carolina, three people are under arrest after a straight trooper is shot in the face. trooper daniel herrell attacked during a traffic stop. he is in stable condition. house republican leaders unanimously vote to remove congressman steve king from all committee posts. minority leader kevin mccarthy says king's comments about white supremacy and white nationalism will not be tolerated. >> we're very proud of the fact that the republican party is the party of lincoln. the republican party believes wholeheartedly in our constitution that all men and women are created equal. and we will stand up for that any time we see somebody say something different. jillian: king claims his comments in a "new york times" interview were taken out of context. out of context. the remains of silent sam stripped away from the university of north carolina at chapel hill overnight. the school removing the confederate statue's base after violent protesters ripped it down last summer. this just hours after u.n.c. chancellor carol full announced the guilt and
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announced she will resign at the end of the school year. steve: a lot going on there. thank you very much. brian: three suspected ms-13 members accused of stabbing high school classmate and two of them used a loophole to enter the country illegally. the next guest fights that gang every day. and says the threat is not going away. he will join us live. i hear it in the background and she's watching too, saying
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[indistinct conversation] [friend] i've never seen that before.
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♪ ♪ i have... ♪
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♪ brian: three suspected ms-13 gang members charged in the brutal stabbing attack of a classmate outside of a long island burger king. two of them picked up by ice in the past but later released according to the dhs two of the suspects had also used the unaccompanied minor loophole to enter the u.s. a couple years ago. our next guest knows all about ms-13 and the threat it poses to him and those who work for him and nassau county. is he nassau county police commissioner patrick ryder. always great to see you, >> thank you for having me. brian: tell us about these three. >> the arrests that occurred in suffolk county. brian: long island nassau and suffolk. >> he won't comment about suffolk's investigation but there is also a presence of ms-13 both here on long island and nassau and suffolk. nassau county we have 200 active ms-13 still in our community that we work day in and day out with our federal partners to make sure we keep the thumb on them to keep them under
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control. brian: the unaccompanied minor program. a lot of the them come in and don't have parents and get placed in surrogate home and school system and create havoc in their school system. what bothers me most, pat, they put them in working class areas in which i guess they don't have the political power to push back like they should. >> we don't get involved in the vetting process when they take unaccompanied minor and place them in a home. many times if we had known where they are placing them, we can work with both the state. brian: because you know the neighborhoods and you know the houses. >> that's correct. we know the people who reside in those. if they are ms-13 members already you don't want to put those kids in those homes. brian: how much does this border battle concern you? >> well, the battle is the kick back that we get. you know are we riling up people within the community. are we riling up the ms-13 members to act out? we don't know that we know we have been pushing down on them. we have it under control. but we found two bodies last year alone that were related to ms-13 that were buried in
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shallow graves in nassau county. brian: they usually have jobs during of the day and create havoc at night and harass kids and terrorize kids also. meanwhile another story that emerges from a local newspaper news day that says ice has been kicked out of a nassau county prison. had you six ice members in a prison in a trailer and this democratic counts sill woman curren decides i want those six ice agents out of the prison. how do you feel about that? >> the appellate division from new york state came down with a division we can no longer hold those for administrative warrants. the decision was made that we move ice off of the campus of the jail because the perception to the public that if you came into the jail to visit somebody, you would get scooped up. that's not the case. hhi, ice has always been professional and always worked with us regarding those that are arrested. we will continue to work with our federal partners. we will continue to cooperate and those that are arrested and turn that information over. brian: that's insulting to kick ice out of the prisons. they are there to do their
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job. 2456r7bgs, pat. appreciate it? >> you are welcome. brian: youngest black legislator in country. god guns and babies. this delegate joins us next. gillette facing backlash over new ad telling men to shave their toxic mass do yomasculinity. our panel here to discuss that dental much sooner. it was a very life changing experience... and it felt like i was me again. that's when i realized i hadn't been for three years. at aspen dental we're all about yes. like yes to flexible hours and payment options. yes to free exam and x-rays for new patients without insurance. and yes whenever you're ready to get started, we are too. call 1-800-aspendental today.
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the latest inisn't just a store.ty it's a save more with a new kind of wireless network store. it's a look what your wifi can do now store. a get your questions answered by awesome experts store. it's a now there's one store that connects your life like never before store. the xfinity store is here. and it's simple, easy, awesome. steve: 7:24 in new york city. news by the numbers. 3.8%. that's the new record low unemployment rate for post 9/11 veterans reached last year. moments ago the president tweeted quote just announced veterans unemployment has reached 18-year low. really good news for our vets and their families. will soon be an all-time
quote
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low. do you think so media will report on this and all the other great economic news? next 3500 gallons how much liquid chocolate spilled. a chocolate river they described it after tanker crashed. the truck's trailer latch detached. nobody was hurt. and finally $1,500 a month. that's how much one family is paying to rent a silicon valley apartment just for their cat. the father says the animal, louise and tina needed a new home when his daughter left for college, so now he is spending 1500 bucks a month for his cats. ainsley: at just 19 years old our next guest is the youngest black legislator in america. caleb hanna taking his place in the west virginia house of delegates last week. brian: ran campaign from university dorm room and
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defeated democratic opponent last november by running on a political philosophy of god, guns and babies. steve: west virginia delegate caleb hanna joins us now live. good morning to you caleb. >> good morning. how are you guys? steve: we are doing okay. congratulations. in reading your background, caleb, i understand you were inspired by barack obama initially, right? >> correct. yeah. and i will be honest with you, the whole reason i was inspired by him was simply because the fact he was african-american. had nothing to do with his policies. steve: and so over the last number of years though, you have realized that you are more attracted to conservative principles, right? >> correct, yeah. my father was a coal miner here in west virginia. and he lost his job back in 2012 and frankly, that was directly because of obama's policies. and when i started getting real interested in state politics and following the parties there were three
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things the republicans stood for that the democrats didn't and that was god, guns, and babies. ainsley: tell us more about that. >> well, those are west virginia values that really got a lot of us. that's one thing we care about. i'm very religious. i have been my entire life. i believe that god comes first and foremost in every policy decision i should make. i'm very supportive of our second amendment rights and our right to bear arms and i believe we have to stand up for those who don't get the chance to stand up for themselves. so, i'm very pro-life. brian: caleb, you could be hanging out doing a lot of different things in college. what made you want to run and do this? >> well, i never was quite pleased with the leadership i was getting at the state level. so, i figured who is better to take initiative than yourself? so, i told myself when i was old enough to have a chance to take a run at it i would do it. and this was my first time i had the opportunity.
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ainsley: is this just the beginning for you? >> i think it's a little too early to tell. we will see what god has in store for me from here on out. but, i'm definitely going to try to focus on what i'm doing now and try to do the best job i can for district 44 here in west virginia. steve: sure. so you are 19 years old. still running -- you still live in your dorm at west virginia state university. >> yes, sir. steve: you are, as we mentioned it earlier, in the house of delegates. but this morning, exclusively on "fox & friends" you have an announcement about something you would like to achieve legislatively. >> yeah. so, the west virginia republican majority in the house has been very supportive of president trump and his efforts to secure the southern border. so, i am happy to co-sponsor a piece of legislation that i don't think just west virginia will be happy about but the american people as a
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whole. so i'm working together with delegates robbie and patrick martin. robbie taking the lead. and we want to take 10 million of west virginia's $200 million surplus and give it directly to the southern border to help build the wall. brian: that's pretty impressive. do you think it will have the support you need to get >> i think it will. we owe it to the voters. west virginia has a terrible drug problem. and i believe that a lot of those drugs and opioids are coming directly from the southern border. i have spoken to local and state law enforcement and they say these drugs are so pure they can't be coming from anywhere other than mexico. so i believe that the wall is a crucial part in addressing west virginia's drug problem. steve: you agree with the president it is a crisis at our southern border. >> i can definitely agree with that 100 percent. ainsley: okay. congratulations. >> thank you very much.
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brian: caleb handna, thanks. meanwhile 2 minutes after the hour. steve: take a look at your tvs and take a look at this right here. a toddler sitting in her car seat flies out of a moving car. the shocking moments caught on camera state ahead. >> and gillette facing backlash over their new ad telling men to shave their toxic mass could you lindt. our panel here to discuss. this. >> bullying. >> the me too movement against sexual harassment. >> masculinity. >> is this the best a man can get? lease the 2019 nx 300 for $339/mo. for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer.
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>> boys will be boys. >> but something finally changed. >> allegations regarding sexual assault and sexual harassment. >> crossing the line. >> and there will be no going back. because we, we believe in the best in men. ainsley: gillette's new ad challenges men to basically shave their toxic masculinity asking is this the best a man can get? sparking controversy with some not so impressed with the message. so is this really the best an ad campaign can get? here to discuss is our panel. the host of making money on fbn charles payne, "new york post" columnist carol marco wits and dr. darren porcher at the end. a u.s. army veteran and former nypd officer. thank you for being with us. >> thank you for having us. >> i know it's directed to the men so i have to ask you the female on the panel what do you think about this? >> i find it entirely offensive. ainsley: really. ainsley: really. >> con flights masculinity with cat-calling, with
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violence it also con flights two boys wrestling at a barbecue with bullying and other, you know, unsavory behavior. i think that's ridiculous. we would never do that to we would never do that to women. we would never say well these women are behaving badly so all women or all femininity is bad. ainsley: charles, what did you take away from it. >> that's the danger here what does the term dangerous masculinity. we don't need to tell our boys not to be bullies or misogynist. we don't need them to do it. essentially here with looking at is another form of corporate virtue signaling. gillette trying to appeal, i guess, to millennial men but the fact of the matter is the losing market share in millennial men several rivals making blades just as good but lower prices. these kind of things can be offensive. obviously, you know, there so some changes in this country that are for the country that are for the good. i was bull idea big time as a kid. we do want to see certain changes. i'm not sure we need
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gillette to tell us what those changes are. ainsley: darren, your thoughts? >> this is strictly focused on hyper masculinity. we live in a population in the united states 360 million people. that 360 million people, 51% are women. so, the men are actually the minority. they are not the majority in the united states. we are not r. kelly and harvey weinstein. the truth of the matter is that's a small component. the larger, broader perspective with men that treat women equally. i reflect back on my experiences as a member of the united states military. i was an officer in the army. we came down hard on people that treated women in a negative perspective. in addition to that i was a lieutenant in the nypd. we had strong directives in terms of welcoming women in to the nypd and policing according going back into what this ad represents is an atrocity and we should be seeing it's equal to women not as beneath.
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moving forward, i think this is something we do naturally as men. both of my colleagues on the panel have stated the same and something that's going to the left and i have a problem with it. ainsley: they did release a statement. it says we are taking a realistic look at what's happening today and aiming to inspire change by acknowledging that the old saying boys will be boys is not an excuse. we recognize it's sparking a lot of passionate dialogue at the same time it's getting people to stop and think about what it means to be our bestselves. which is the point of the spot, they say. carroll, are you happy with that? >> >> i have never heard boys will be boys used to excuse really true bad behavior. i have two sons and a daughter. i'm personally invested in men and women both doing well in the world. i say boys will be boys when my son's face plant off the couch onto the floor and you are like boys will be boys. this is their behavior. my daughter doesn't do that so, i have never heard of it used to excuse rape or rape-like behavior. that's ridiculous.
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also, i would like to say that men are touch? a precarious position right now in our country. fewer of them go to college. more commit suicide. dangerous jobs. a lot going wrong for men. this ad just feels to meek like kicking men they are down. ainsley: charles, we always have you on to talk about money. what does this mean for business perspective. a lot of women buy gillette raisersrayrazors too. >> airline get rid of plastic straws and next day raise their bag fees. give me break. giving lip service to wider larger issues that need a lot more than just lip service. ainsley: darren, it is opening a dialogue. the me too movement we are having conversations we didn't used to have. >> right. the societal norm is the respect for your fellow man and your fellow woman. once again, this is a marginalization that gillette is moving forward
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in connection with the me too movement and movements in connection with the denigration of women. misogyny is something that we don't tolerate in our society. majority of all male does respect women. we have females in our family structure. therefore, moving forward, this is a misstep on gillette's part and hopefully we can get past this and move forward. ainsley: okay. charles, karol and darren, thank you for being with us. great conversation. hand it over to jillian who has headlines for us. jillian: we have a fox news alert now. broadway legend carol channing famous for starring in hello dolly has died. ♪ a kiss on the hand ♪ may be quite continental ♪ yes, baby jillian: the actress passing away from natural causes at her home in california. channing was a pioneer in the industry receiving several tony awards in her career including one for lifetime achievement. she was 97 years old. stop what you are doing and
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look at this. a toddler sitting in her car seat flies out of a moving vehicle. you can see the 2-year-old girl stuck in the middle of the road as another driver stops and rushes to get her in minnesota. she is okay. police say the car seat was not properly fastened inside the vehicle. the child's mother could be charged with child endangerment. florida wants to put god back in public schools. a state lawmakers are proposing a bill requiring high schools to offer elective classes on religion and the bible. some schools already have these classes but it's not mandatory for districts to offer them. if passed, the new curriculum would take effect next school year. and move over bork and elizabetbeto o'rourkeand elizab. kamala harris is the next democrat hoping to make waves on social media ♪ one nation and you grove ♪ getting down for the funk of it. jillian: the california senator and potential 2020 presidential candidate sharing her musical mood mix
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on social media was part of an appearance on the late show with stephen colbert. a look at your headlines. now let's go outside to janice dean where there is a lot of purple on that map, janice. it's cold. >> yes. i notice you were looking at my maps earlier, jillian. she wants to know if there is going to be snow in philadelphia and there is a good chance of that my friend as we head into the weekend. let's take a look at the maps and i will show you where the cold is across the northeast and the midwest. okay, so it's pretty quiet right now. but across the west, that's where we have our next system moving. in heavy rain and mountain snow for california is going to be particularly dangerous in the burn areas where we are going to have flash flooding. and some of this energy is going to move across the country and make for not one but two storm systems that are going to kind of get their act together and bring us the potential for a very impactful storm. will it be rain or will it be snow? this computer model shows a rain event along the coast but we don't quite know yet.
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we don't have our ducks in a row here. there is the potential for a very significant snow storm for parts of the great lakes, the interior northeast as well as some of the coastal areas and then the icing as well. this is going to be a big deal, jillian, and steve, ainsley and brian. we will continue to watch it and look at all those computer models. back to you. steve: something could be coming. all right, j.d. >> yes, sir. steve: straight ahead. florida senator rick scott just started working washington, d.c. and he says the dysfunction on capitol hill is probably as bad as you think. is he going to join us live for his first national interview as a u.s. senator next. ainsley: plus benjamin watson has play you had 15 seasons in the nfl. now he is about to hang up his cleats to start his next career with his growing family. he will be here live in the next hour ♪ i'm not alone ♪ i'm going to make this place your home ♪ settle down ♪ it will all be clear
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only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ ♪ ♪ steve: partial government shutdown now in its fourth weekday 25 right now. president trump, democrats, refusing to compromise on any sort of a deal on barred wall. if you think it sounds pretty dysfunctional. the next guest says yes you are right. joining us first live interview florida republican senator rick scott. good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. it makes no sense. it's completely disfangsal. they voted for it before. they want the government to open. but you can't get it done. then they say they want border security but gosh we don't want barriers how does that make any sense and then they sit here and they keep
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getting paid when they know other people that are out there working are not getting paid. so, if you don't have a budget you shut down government you shouldn't get paid and everybody ought to get that room and say look we all agree on border security we voted for it let's get something done. steve: this must frustrate you because you were a very successful businessman. you everywhere very successful governor in the great state of florida. great state of florida. and when there was a problem. problem. you would, as you just said, you would bring everybody in the room and you would say we are not leaving until we fix. this but if nancy pelosi says no, just a flat out no, even though the president has already compromised on certain issues, it's not going to be concrete. it can be steel. it's not going be solid. it's going to be flat, where do you go from there? >> i think if i was the president, what i did when i was the governor, a ceo you look at every option you can you say it's my job to make sure we have a secure border. what are my options? i'm going to make every decision can i, take every power i have to make
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something happen. that's what the president ought to be doing because the democrats, i guess they think this is good politics. they won't even negotiate with him. so, you got to work with people. i mean, i worked with my legislature. did i get it done exactly the way i wanted things done? no. but i know they had to win and we had to win to get something done for my state. steve: okay. right now, in the senate, there's a so-called gang of 20. 10 republicans, 10 democrats trying to come up with a plan b. the president has made it very clear is he not going to budge. how do you get something that would attract his eye and he would go, okay, i'm on board with that because lindsey graham had an idea let's open the government for three weeks and negotiate. the president already told him lindsey, great idea, not going to do it? >> yeah. i talked to lindsey about things like that. everybody ought to keep talking to see if there is some way to get this done. as the democrats say, i don't care if we, you know, come back up here, we are still never going to talk about border security. we're never going to talk
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about making sure, you know, people are safe, then what do you do? if you are the president, you say why would i waste my time, meeting with people and talking to people that have said i'm not going to do anything, i'm going to take whatever action i can take on my own. i think it's important to talk to people. i think it's important to see what can be done. steve: all right. let's see what happens. he is a brand new senator from the great state of florida. rick scott, senator, thank you very much. >> have a great day. steve: you bet. straight ahead on this tuesday. the next women's march is just days away. the group's co-founders are under fire under claims of anti-semitism. our next guest argues all jews should skip the women's march and we'll tell you about that it's hard to believe the miracle on the hudson. remember when sully sullenberger landed that plane on the hudson? that happened 10 years ago today. three of the survivors join us to talk about how their lives changed that day on the huden. hudson.
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♪ >> a lot of people, by lot of people include me in this, think that you are using your organization as anti-semitism masked in activism. >> the women's march unequivocally condemns anti-semitism. >> remarks about jewish people. >> yes. and we have repeatedly. ainsley: just days before the women's march the co-founders are now under fire over claims of anti-semitism within the group. brian: in fact, our next gest wrote an op-ed writing quote all jews should skip the women's march this saturday. mellowed joins us now to discuss. mellowed, this has really boomeranged. you do not feel as though they have rejected the anti-semitic remarks? >> no. i think they have doubled down on it. i mean, tamika malory
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yesterday on "the view" had plenty of opportunities to say she condemned farrakhan and she would not say it she must be a great dancer because she danced around it she had so many times where there was opportunity to renounce him, renounce what he says about jews, but she would not do it. ainsley: she is one of the co-founders of the women's marv. we have that sound bite. listen to this. >> call him the greatest of all time. >> i didn't call him the greatest of all time because of his rhetoric. i called him the greatest of all time because of what he has done in black communities. i don't agree with many of mr. farrakhan's statements. >> include about jewish people. >> as i said i don't agree with many of mr. farrakhan's statements. >> do you condemn them. >> i don't agree with these statements. at the end of the day,. >> you won't condemn it? >> no, no, no, no. to be very clear. it's not my language. ainsley: how did you feel she posted a picture of facial cowan and good. greatest of all time. >> insulting to the jewish community and to america
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that this is something that people will celebrate with her marching. you know, the southern poverty law center calls the nation of islam a hate group. she is a very active member of this hate group of which farrakhafair is a leader. she will say i don't agree with all of it. but she agrees with enough of it to make it very concerning. brian: people that went and participated with the women's march or women's group, what do you think it says about them? >> you know, i'm not here to judge other people. i'm here to say for those of us who feel that this anti-semitism is going on too far and too long, who won't condemn publicly or even maybe even between themselves that this is something that jews should be aware of, that's my concern. you know, this is not something, the march is not something that jews should feel comfortable in right now, i don't think, because the leaders will not
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denounce farrakhan and they backtrack in terms of what they say about anti-semitism. anti-semitism. in the first unity principles they talked about all these other minority groups. but, the jews, we only 2% of jews are the ones with the most religious hate crime reported hate crimes. yet, we were not listed on that list. they don't really care about the jews. brian: january 19th is the women's march. i'm sure they will pay the price for this. >> it looks like they pay. the jewish committee gather and celebrate chabad which yin nights us and doesn't separate us like they are. ainsley: you can read her column in the "new york post" or op-ed. excellent. thank you so much for being here. >> thank you so much. ainsley: you are welcome. brian: next hour, coming your way, president trump tweeting moments ago about the new caravan that left overnight from honduras and seems to be picking up in
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numbers. we are live with the caravan in honduras next with griff. ainsley: plus, nfl great benjamin watson and congressman devin nunes both here live ♪ big time ♪ big time ♪ this is loma linda, a place with one of the highest life expectancies in the country. you see so many people walking around here in their hundreds. so how do you stay financially well for all those extra years? well, you have to start planning as early as possible. we all need to plan, for 18 years or more, of retirement. i don't have a whole lot saved up, but i'm working on it now. i will do whatever i need to do. plan your financial life with prudential. bring your challenges. since you're heading off to dad... i just got a zerowater. but we've always used brita. it's two stage-filter... doesn't compare to zerowater's 5-stage. this meter shows how much stuff, or dissolved solids, gets left behind.
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♪ >> another migrant caravan leaving honduras overnight. >> here is what is so fascynqñ they said they're seeing already a larger group than they had back in object. >> congress could fix this in five minutes if they wanted to. >> they say they want border security, gosh we don't want barriers. how does that make any sense? brian: three ms-13 gang members accused of stabbing their high school classmate. >> we have members in our community that we work stay in, day out to keep them under control. ainsley: gillette's new ad
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challenges men to shave men's toxic masculinity. >> this is atrocity. we should be seen as equal to women, not beneath. >> check this out with fast-food. burger king, wendy's and mcdonald's. we have big macs, quarter-pounders with cheese, that i like, that you like. [laughter]. steve: it is 8:01. thank you very much to for joining us pretty cool the president of the united states, even though the white house chefs were furloughed. brought them in fast-food. nate silver, if i were a college student i would think it was pretty sweet to eat mcdonald's ainsley: you saw this beautiful dining room table with boxes of
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hamburgers and pizza on it. love that. brian: i so glad they went to the white house, that is the story. not worry who is showing up, who is not showing up, what the owner thinks, protests, back to football celebration. steve: something new. hour three, we start with a fox news alert. >> a new migrant caravan leaves honduras. hundreds of migrants, officialy on the the move. their goal to reach the u.s. steve: griff jenkins is there. griff=ç reporter: they're telling me they're very frustrated with the president of honduras, juan orlando fernandez. they view him being corrupt. why they are leaving the country that failed them. they believe coming to the united states has not reached down to the people, this road, just outside of major city of san pedro you have another caravan, about five to 600 in
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this group. about another five to 600 left last night in the rain hours before the predicted early morning start. and that is about 1000 people working their way towards the guatemala-honduras border, to head towards the mexicoç borde, ultimately three thousand miles away to where i'm standing the united states. we spoke to one of the migrants. here is what he told us. >> do you plan to cross legally into the united states or illegally? >> i don't know. >> worried about criminals coming to the united states. are you a criminal? >> no. no. because i believe in god. the united states, i came to work in a restaurant. i need opportunity. reporter: but i've told this group that the united states is
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not going to let themç in just for work. they said they're coming anyway. they heard the last caravan got people in. finally what will be important thing to watch, as we follow this caravan. it has to get through honduras and guatemala. watch how mexico and new president and administration handle this. they assured president trump they will try to stop illegal entry and will off trierry work and temporary asylum for people that come legally into the mexico but not the united states. very fluid, day one of a very long journey. one thing for sure, they're coming, guys. brian: griff, i don't understand how they could not understand the trouble the other caravans caused at the border, fromç the rocks being thrown, to holed up in tijuana. why are they not getting message this will not work? reporter: that is great question, brian. the answer, the border patrol, cpp, it's a pull factor, if you
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will, causing more caravans to come because they know that our immigration allows people to come in illegally. they disappear. the catch-and-release, if you will, along with the fact they see this tijuana caravan already had success in some of the migrants getting in illegally. they say, listen, we're coming. it is a pull factor for them. the officials at border patrol tell me, how thisç caravan is handled whether we continue to see more. there is already social media advertisements for another caravan to start on january 20th. ainsley: is it easy for them to get into mexico at the southern border there? reporter: they plan to go into the mexico-guatemala region where we saw the clash on a bridge for about 24 to 48 hours, ainsley, if you remember. they are fully aware of that. but they are headed to that same location. we will expect to see possibly a very similar scene. the reason why they go all the
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way west to that specific point, is that in the area just north of us, which would be easier and shorterç path, that is dominatd by narcotraffickers and they're fearing for their lives, the danger on the journey. steve: griff jenkins live with the group, the caravan down in honduras. thank you very. what awaits these migrants unlike in the past is now the new mexican governor, or rather president, made it very clear if anybody tries to seek asylum in the united states, you will wait in mexico. that is something different. i wonder how many people know that. brian: the president just tweeted headed up to our border from honduras. only a wall will work. only a wall or steel barrier will make our country safe. stopç playing political games d end the shutdown. steve: meantime there's a group of 20 u.s. senators, 10 democrats, trying to do the best
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come up with some sort of plan b. keep in mind they are senators. right now mitch mcconnell is under zero pressure to do anything in the u.s. senate because he so far has shown little likelihood that he is going to break from the president who is completely dug in. ainsley: recent poll out, "washington post," "abc news poll," asked americans have you been personally inconvenienced by shutdown. 82% said no. 18% said yes. shouldç trump continue demandig for a border wall? 52% demand funding. 41% said trump should compromise. steve: 82% figure shows majority of people are not feeling it. brian: yet. steve: during the survey time, exactly right, brian, yet. when will they? if you go to the airports, have you had a problem? i was at the airport last weekend. all the lanes were open. didn't impact me at all.
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clearly, 18% of americans say yes it has inconvenienced them. but a big number say no. absolutely not. brian: say on average tsa has 3.2%ç sickouts on daily basis. it is up to 7.6. i go to newark. when i go to newark i never get through in any type of reasonable time. fda says they are having trouble keeping up. there is slowdown with the food inspections. look out when it comes to air traffic controllers. if the border patrol people working at a paycheck. they have to solve this thing this week. this is not a hard thing to solve. not talking about massive overturn of the government. what you are doing 10 democrats and 10 republicans working toward as solution to get government back and running. they have to commit to some type of border barrier. that is what they have to do. that will pique the president's interest, not delaying negotiation because, almost said hillary clinton, because nancy pelosi is not allowing any
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talk of a barrier. remember, she said 1.3 billion you can have it. not enough. nothing goes towards the fence, wall, barrier. >> tsa has sickouts. up to -- steve: brian has new ipad. he has not quite figured out how to run it. thank you, siri. brian: i didn't know -- ainsley: you got the ipad. there was no keyboard. he said two-week waiting list for the keyboard. when did you get the keyboard, brian. brian: pot itç yesterday. we're being listened to. steve: siri is listening all the time. to your earlier point about the gang of 20. talking about people in the u.s. senate. do you really think that chuck schumer will say okay, forget about nancy pelosi. come up with a bill with more money. not in a million years. ainsley: we interviewed earlier on the show, cute guy to west virginia, caleb hannah, 19 years
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old, ran the campaign from college dorm room. beat democratic incumbent. he has a solution what washington should do. >> i'm working together with delegates robbie and patrick martin, robbie taking the lead and we wantç to take 10 million of west virginia's 200 million-dollar surplus and give it directly to the southern border to help build the wall. we owe it to the voters. west virginia has a terrible drug problem and i believe that, it is, a lot of those drugs and opioids are coming directsly from the southern border. i have spoken to state law enforcement, that the drugs are so pure can't be coming anywhere other than mexico. steve: his state is so far from the southern border. but he wants legislation in the west virginia assembly, to send a lot of money to build the border wall.
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reading about the national safety council. car crashes one of the leading causes of deaths in the u.s., one in 103 chance. opioid more likely to kill you than a car crash, can you believe that? 1 in 96. steve: is it a crisis? you be the judge. brian: if siri gives you information, like to toss it over to jillian. jillian: said the "s" word. afraid what is to come. starting with this serious story and fox news alert. escalating overnight, four law enforcement officers and two states shot in the line of duty. in texas the search is on for a possible suspectç after three deputies are hurt serving a search warrant a another suspect shot dead. a third in custody. all the officers are expected to survive. in north carolina three people are under arrest after a state trooper is shot in the face. trooper daniel harrell attacked during a traffic stop. he is in stable condition.
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broadway legend carol channing famous for starring in "hello dolly," has died. ♪ a kiss on the hand. yes, baby. ainsley: the actress passing away from natural causes at her home in california. she was a pioneer in theç industry, receiving several tony awards over her career, including one for lifetime a achievement. carl channing was 97 years old. steve: she had a long life. i was reading about her this morning. she has been on "fox & friends." we'll play you a little clip. she was on the high school debate team. she loved debating. that led to the theater. she prided herself on the fact that she never needed an under stud until one night in kalamazoo, michigan, she apparently had food poisoning, but otherwise the show must go on. ainsley: she was always there.
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brian: hello dollly. on "fox & friends"? ♪ diamonds are a girl's best friend. ♪ ♪ send me a little -- >> you're ryan, brian. brian: doesn't matter. >> i feel the room swaying. the band playing. ♪ brian: she couldn't pick me out after lineup but she was extremely special. and very charming. steve:ç she was indeed. carol channing, dead at age of 97. ainsley: long career. steve: 13 minutes after the top of the hour, in about an hour and 15 minutes, attorney general nominee william barr will head to the u.s. capitol for his confirmmation hearing.
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our next guest clerked for justice clarence thomas. says barr is more qualified for the job. ainsley: 10 years ago, today the "miracle on the hudson" happened. three of the survivors on the plane join us to reflect on that very morning coming up. steve: 10 years ago. brian: rescue workers acted tremendously. steve: said it was a "miracle on the hudson." it wasç indeed.
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[indistinct conversation]
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[friend] i've never seen that before. ♪ ♪ i have... ♪
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♪ steve: just an hour and 12 minutes from right now, attorney general nominee, william barr, that man right there, heads to capitol hill for his confirmation hearing. he claims it is vitally important for robert mueller to continue his russia investigation but that doesn't matter to some democrats who are still expected to try to derail hisç nomination. carrie seven vino at the judicial crisis network and clerked for justice clarence thomas is from d.c. good morning toe you. >> thank you. steve: big high-profile confirmation hearing, mr. gorsuch that was not pretty. do you expect that today, do you? >> i don't think we'll see anything like the kavanaugh hearings. but for someone unanimously confirmed to this position already before, even people like
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democratic senator leahy you should get bipartisan support, we'll see shocking levels of opposition. i can't imagine anyone more qualified for the position. but that doesn't mean democrats are not goingç to try to cause issues. hard to imagine a better nominee than barr will be confirmed. steve: as attorney general he would lead the department of justice and for a lot of democrats, the doj they're very western concerned about the robert mueller investigation. it is really critical that mr. barr say, hands off, he will do what he is going to do? >> i think he has the perfect approach. he does say he thinks it should continue. that is for the good of the country, for the good of the president, and he thinks there needs to be transparency. he is someone that can do oversight sessions was not in a position to be able to do directly himself. i think that will be very helpful. someone whoç will be a steadyig force on the department because he has been there before. he knows it inside out.
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and i think that will really help with this. steve: you know democrats will try to pin some of his previous comments to him, say, is that how you feel now? >> sure. look, when he was attorney general before he also called for independent counsel into the passport-gate for the initial bush presidency. so this is someone who knows he can be independent of the president. he also, but most of all committed to the law. you have got a lot of people who worked for him before, this is the kind of guy that doesn't wilt in the face of fire. who can stand up and do what he knows is right. even when he is getting criticism for it. soç that is exactly the kind of person we need and i think we'll see some of that today in the hearings. steve: there is kind of a mess in certain parts of the department of justice. i'm sure some republicans will say what are you doing to fix it. we'll stay tuned and live own the channel. thanks for joining us. >> great. steve: 8:20 here in new york city. another democrat will throw their name into the race.
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who will it be? we'll tell you. benjamin watson played in the nfl. he is is about to hang up his cleats to start his next career with that family. he is live. ♪ val, vern... i'm off to college and i'm not gonna be around... i'm worried about my parents' retirement. oh, don't worry. voya helps them to and through retirement... ...dealing with today's expenses... ...like college... ...while helping plan, invest and protect for the future. so they'll be okay... without me? um... and when we knock out this wall... imagine the closet space. yes! oh hey, son. yeah, i think they'll be fine. voya. helping you to and through retirement. ♪ (woman) and my brother ray and i started startsearching for answers.ords. (vo) when it's time to navigate in-home care, follow that bright star. because brightstar care earns the same accreditation
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like everyone, i lead a busy life. but i know the importance of having time to do what you love. at comcast we know our customers' time is valuable. that's why we have 2-hour appointment windows, including nights and weekends. so you can do more of what you love. my name is tito, and i'm a tech-house manager at comcast. we're working to make things simple, easy and awesome. ♪ steve: we're back right now. as you can see with some headlines. it is a big day for britain as parliament votes onç brexit. prime minister theresa may delayed last month's vote. it is largely expected to fail which would be bad for her. the uk is set to leave the european union on march 29th of this year. los angeles teachers striking for a second day. that is a lot of them right there. they're demanding smaller class
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sizes, higher pay in the nation's second largest school district. another democrat is expected to throw her name into the hat, into the race for president in 2020. cbs is reporting that new york senator kristin gillibrand will announce a exploratory committee on the stephen colbert show later on cbs.ç that, brian and ainsley, is some of the news. brian: after 15 years playing football for teams like the new england patriots, who seem pretty good and cleveland browns who are getting better and new orleans saints who are one game away from the super bowl, benjamin watt sound is retiring. ainsley: he is trading in his jersey to focus on dad of five children and wife pregnant with twins. brian: author of the book, the new dad's playbook. ainsley: my daddy, number 82, benjamin watson joins us. congratulations on the book, to
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being a dad, all the beautiful children. a hero to some people. ao many look up to you. tell me you decided to retire? >> well it's a combination of a few things. at age of 38 your body is not what it used to be. spiritually coming into this last year after being in baltimore couple years and going through a tough injury there with my achilles, knowing wanted to play one more year and praying to go to a place familiar with us. god opened the door for us to come to new orleans for the last year. emotionally, mentioned the family. really wanting to have opportunity to set down roots somewhere. envelope lifestyle can be transient. you can be moving around. collectively, spiritually, emotionally, physically i'mç aa point where i'm ready to end on my own terms. hopefully we do end with a big win. brian: right. beat the rams, get to the super bowl. that is the goal right now. benjamin, you also said you were urged by former teammate, tedy
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bruschi, to put aside the football persona, become a dad, become a father. how did that affect you? >> well, early in my career i played with the new england patriots. teddy was one of my older teammates. my wife and i didn't have kids at time. i'm a perfectionist, when things don't go right to me i relate my performance to my actual self-worth. and i was struggling with that. if i had aç great game or great practice i would be on cloud nine. if not, i would come home with a bad attitude. one thing he said, benjamin, whether you come home, sit in the driveway ten minutes, you need to be daddy, husband, father, all those things when you walk through that car. it was a process, but that is something i tried to do. something we all can do as men, would i say, or as women wherever we work at. don't bring work home. because the people closest to you, sometimes bear the brunt of that burden when you have a bad day. they really love you unconley. ainsley: your wife will need you
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at home now having twins and you have seven children. congratulations on that. i'm sure that isç exciting. >> thank you very much so. ainsley: talking about the gillette ad this morning. play it for you. get your reaction. watch to. >> we believe in the best in men. to say the right thing, to act the right way,. >> not cool, not cool. >> because a boy watching today, will be the men of tomorrow. ainsley: benjamin, what is your reaction? this is getting a lot of talk. some people find it offensive, some agree with it. >> i agree with it largely. as a man, as someone raising two, soon to be four boys, that is somebody who is around men a lot. understanding, that for men to be the protector,ç the provide, that god designed us to be we need to challenge each other. a lot of times you see it happen where no one is willing to be that bystander. no one is willing to stand in the gap for someone.
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no one is willing to challenge someone else, because we all want to fit in, which is natural. something that is important to me, something that is important to our country, something important to our world. god gave us as men in particular, particular role when it comes to protecting them, when it comes to doing all those things. obviously there is a political aspect of this. whether gillette decided to do the ad because of political reasons, that could be the case. maybe to sell mores source, i don7tç know, but whatever reason they decided to do it, good things can come from it, we as men, we as a culture realize some things we say, some of the things we do, some things we allow to around us can change if we're willing to step up, be real men. brian: no one who steps on football field who is not extremely tough and strong, i get it. how do you, do you worry at all, about men losing the toughness and being ashamed to show a steel or a toughness because you
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need that balance in life, correct? >> you do need a balance. that is the far end of the spectrum. we live in culture today it is kind of eitherç or. you have to be far on the right, far on the left, you have to be all for men doing whatever they want to do or be for them not having any resemblance of masculinity. it can be both and. men who are tough and strong. who wrestle as we saw in the video. we have the physical contact mean need that, especially young boys they need the contact. you also have men who are tender, kind, who are loving, who speak truth, who will encourage, who are firm their children, affirm other people, who treat women as we saw in the video as equals when it comes to their position in the work place or respect them because god made them too and they are not subservient to us. cai think that is the tricky part. that is the part that we need very much in this country, not just when it comes to this topic
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but coming to many others. brian: that is part of your book, the new dad's playbook. one win away from the super bowl in atlanta. best of luck this sunday. >> thanks for having me on. appreciate. >> we need more men like you. you're amazing. thanks for being a good leader. brian: tied in the saints. ainsley: sign behind him, choose joy. i like that. men need to be tender. that is a good word, isn't it? brian: right. ainsley: 8:30 on the east coast. media is going wild on so-called bombshell reports connecting president trump to russia. >>ç this nation is under threat and the threat is is the person sitting in the seat of the president of the united states. ainsley: but congressman devin nunez says the reports are all about revenge. he is here live coming up. brian: 10 years ago today, a miracle happened. a plan crashing. 155 people crash landing on the hudson river, remember? everyone survived. three survivors are here to reflect this morning.
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♪ >> we now have an indication, in fact we're confident now, this is a us air ways plane that has gone down in the hudson river. every single passenger got out alive. >> we landed pretty hard. >> the pilot, chesley sullenberger iii, if his name was not household word it will be. steve: the last man off the plane, the captain, pilot. brian: rescue workers acted tremendously. steve: he said it wasç a "mirae on the hudson." it was indeed. everybody remembers the "miracle on the hudson" when that jet with 155 people on board, crash-landed on the hudson river and every single person survived. ainsley: believe it or not, that was 10 years ago. and we have three of the passengers who were on flight 1549 here with us now in the
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studio. we have dennis lockky. barry leonard in the middle and chris rini on the end. thank you all for being here. can you believe it has been 10 years. >> no. ainsley: hard to believe, right? >> definitely is. ainsley: tell us what that day was like. what was that day like fmr you? >> i was commuting back and forth. i did it every single week on a thursday. is started out like everyone. it was snowy and cold. i thought the light would be delayed. sure enough, not only delayed but sent to another gate. i was thinking it was just another flight. steve: absolutely. 1500 feet, there is a bird strike what was that like the next 70 seconds? >> we were up a little bit higher than that, and i after individual flyer. i flew every single solitary week. steve: you were the first person on the plane. >> i was. i was the first person thatç boarded aircraft that day.
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i heard the first noise and horrendous smell in the cabin and all kinds of smoke, the first thing that came to my mind was of course being in manhattan was a terrorist attack. absolutely no idea it was a bird strike because i wasn't looking out the window. steve: chris, you are a drag racer. so you know about engines. suddenly there was no engine sound. >> there was no engine sound. steve: chris was not supposed to be on the flight. >> it was last minute flight. i was going down to my engine shop, buck racing engines. testing a new motor. i booked it 48 hours before, hopefully get a seat. i was running late. thought i wouldç missed the light. got there, move the gate. i thought perfect. delay working out for me. ainsley: when you did you realize this was not going down in your favor? >> my first process was too young to die. i knew most likely not having a
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positive ending. steve: at that point you're heading to the hudson, passenger said brace for impact, that was pretty much it. no idea you hit the lottery, "sully" sullenberger an amazing pilot. he is areason you're alive today. >> no doubt about that. this is one in aç billion chan, a lot of us say we're here today. we feel we're in our second life and we're 10 years old. ainsley: barry, changed your life. you told our producers. tell the folks at home. in what way? my made a decision to make some trips that were pretty interesting. you know my son and i go, we climbed mount kilimanjaro together. we also dedicate ad a library to a school for the masai tribe in tanzania. steve: i remember listening to the story on the radio. it was so cold that day. one at a time, go upç show us
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where you are in this picture. denise, where were you? you were actually -- >> i believe that i am right in this general area because i was wearing all black. that is a raft that you're on? >> inverted raft. steve: all right, barry, show us where you are. but you're not wearing shirt supposed to be wearing. you're wearing somebody else's clothes. >> i was actually in the hudson. and i was cold. there was a pilot there that was dead heading back. he said you have to get out of your clothes. so he gave me his pilot shirt. steve: right. >> i have a pilot shirt on. everyone thought i was one of the pilots. ainsley: when you went to the pilots. >> whenç i went to the hospita, everybody was thinking that. steve: chris? >> we didn't plan this. all of us were on the raft. i was on the raft even though farther back in the plane. it look the like a better option than standing on the ring under
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water. ainsley: not everybody got on the raft, some were standing on the wings? >> correct. ainsley: what way did it change your life? >> it changed my life tremendously. i looked at a very big life-changing experience. three feet one way or three feet another, that was the end of it. steve: it was a terrible day. it was the "miracle on the hudson." now you have an anniversary, which is happy for all ofç you. >> that's right. >> yes. steve: denise, barry, chris, god bless you. ainsley: thank you. >> thank y'all so much. >> these guys are so funny. jillian: headlines, fox news alert. possible terror attack at upscale hotel complex in kenya. you see the flames and big black smoke in the capitol city of nairobi. two explosions and and heavy gunfire heard by witnesses. we'll bring you more information as it comes in. man accused of kidnapping 13-year-old jayme closs he chose
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his victim after watching her board a school because. jakeç paterson shot and killed jamie's parents. stuffed a cloth in her mouth panned put her in trunk of a car. he didn't even know her name. 911 calls were just released from the moment she found help. >> she said i am jayme closs? >> yes. he said he killed my parents. i want to go home. help me. so we're kind of scared, he might come. >> yep. >> so if the cops could get here soon. >> i have many deputies headed that way. i will keep you on the line. jillian: patterson is held on $5 million bail. gd thelion bail. rest of his life in prison. first time americans are more likely to die of a opioid overdose than a car crash. the odds of dying in a car crash is 1 in 103.
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over 12,000 adults, age 25 to 34, died from overdoses in 2017. that is look at the headlines. steve: stark numbers. thanks, jillian. brian: meanwhile, 19 minutes until we're done. senator bob menendez calling out fox news photo of him without a shirt own goes viral. >> i want to be clear. i want to be clear. i just want do ask you -- brian: we're live inç puerto ro as democrats defend their winter getaway with lobbyists. plus -- ainsley: congressman devin nunez joins us live on the media russia hysteria, coming up. met the hardest battle, which any human being can fight and never stop. does this sound dismal? it isn't. ♪ ♪ it's the most wonderful life on earth.
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steve: that picture was made in puerto rico. that is where rob schmitt is right now. he is live in san juan, puerto rico where the weather beautiful. good morning to you, rob. reporter: yeah. this is the place to be in january, believe it. this retreat, guys is getting way more attention than i think any of these politicians would have expected it to get. 30, more than 30 democrats and their families came down here on a private charter plane. they joined about, more than 100 lobbyists to come down here. it was billed as aç discussion and ways to help this island, this territory of the united states, trying to get out from underneath all the debt. try to help fix things and problems caused by the disaster of the hurricane back in 2017. and there have been a lot of meetings over the last four days. there was a lot of work that was done. there was also a lot of leisure time. all of that, on the beach with bob menendez on the beach, in the midst of this government shutdown with all the people not being paid, the optics of it
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didn't look good. fox news put a big spotlight on this winter retreat, with all these lobbyists in the upscale hotel and all fancy things and, we caught up with senator bob menendez yesterday cn entire delegation for that matter at their last meeting before going back to the airport to get on the private charter back to d.c. to say the least mr. menendez was not happy to see us. hours and hours and hours of meetings you chose to meet for an hour. >> no. i want to be fair. i want to be fair. i just want to ask you. >> you're neither fair nor balanced. reporter: so congressman tony cardenas, jerry nadler, new york and california, they were much more polite. they were very happy to talk to us, defend why they decided to come down on the retreat in the midst of this shutdown. >> it is important for people tç understand, yes, a shutdown is going on in washington but as you can see, people are living and thriving and trying to
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survive here. it is our job, come here, touch, feel, understand, what puerto rico has been going through. >> if our presence in the washington over the weekend could change that, we would go back in a second. in fact we're doing necessary work here to inform what we do when we get back in terms how we deal with this part of the crisis. reporter: we do want to be fair on this there were a lot of meetings. they did do a lot of work. but again, private plane. fancy hotel. food all taken care of. it is on tibbs of politics sometimes that looks the worst. wen!1 send it back to you. steve: jerry nadler said they were there doing necessary work. get with the program. reporter: i'm with the program. steve: you are indeed. down in puerto rico. brian: rob schmitt, thanks. media going wild over so-called bombshell reports connecting president trump to russia. >> this bombshell "new york times" report -- >> bombshell breaking news. >> it is indeed a bombshell. brian: congressman devin nunez
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says the reports are all about revenge. he joins us live. >> check in with bill hemmer, what is coming up at top of the hour. >> a big important morning for all of us. waiting for the next attorney general. his name is william barr. there are significant issues on the table. this whileç a caravan forms and gets on the move in central america. senator kennedy, the judge, bret baier, shannon bream, jonathan turley, get on the mueller matter, immigration, crime, all that coming up on a special edition of "america's newsroom." come join sandra and me in ten minutes. guys. we will see you at the top of the hour. if i built a van,
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♪ brian: robert mueller, special counsel reportedly scrutinizing a breakfast event attended by
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former house chair devin nunez and michael flynn and dozen foreign officials back in 2016 and what will they find? congressman devin nunez, another day, another story we don't know where it came from. congressman, could you shed light on this what about this trumpç hotel meeting with 60 people including michael flynn before the inauguration. >> i really can't. these guys another day, another fake news story. i don't even know what they're talking about. as chairman of the intelligence committee at the time, i'm now still republican leader of the intelligence committee, my job is to meet with foreign dignitaries. i do that on daily basis, multiple times a day. during inauguration week there were numerous events i attended i continued to attend. i continue to meet foreigners all the time, especially working with the ambassadors here in washington. that is what our intelligence agencies do. so the intelligence committee
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oversees 17 agencies.ç they're not supposed to spy on american citizens, right? so we're supposed to insure that is not happening. i say that because for the first time ever our intelligence agencies got used to spy on a presidential campaign. so the fact that i'm holding meetings with ambassadors, you know, you can have at it because i do it every day. brian: yeah. whether they contributed funds to the inauguration. you were on the inauguration committee. that is what mueller is evidently reporting. you say too, how did we get this information? is mueller leaking or is this unfounded? >> yeah. i don't look, brian i don't put anything into this. i was on transition team. my job was working with the national security issues. and iç was meeting with peoplen a daily basis. i don't know who -- i was actually not on the inaugural committee. brian: my bad. >> i was actually on the transition team. working on national security issues. brian: right. >> so, we're available. brian: i know you just came from california. got up early for us. we appreciate it.
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big story over the weekend, fbi, this is the headline, fbi opening inquiry whether trump was secretly working on behalf of trash that. they cite a series of events, changing of the platform at the rnc, him asking russia to find hillary clinton 30,000 emails. the fbi thought the presidential candidate and president was an agent of russia? is this news to you? >> well, look it is totally ridiculous, right? so i don't know that this story is even true. this also could be fake news. but think about it, if it is true. you have, by this time the president has already been in office for four-months. so if he is secretly corroborating and collaborating and conspiring with russians, i think the secret service or someone would have known. and so, remember they were already investigating, they had fisa warrants on trump campaign advisors. we know from the text messages at that time, there was no there there, from the lead
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investigator. so it appears to me like, we don't know when these visionsç stopped or start. but remember we have asked to see the scope memo, what mueller's actually supposed to be investigating. so we have never seen that cope memo even though congress repeatedly asked to see the scope memo of the mueller investigation. if that's true, then if they actually, if "the new york times" actually knows what is in the scope memo you would have another example of intelligence of, classified information being shown to the "new york times" and not shown to congress. so who knows if this is true or not. brian: yeah, hopefully we'll get answers to this. >> as you said, brian, it isç ridiculous to think that so many americans minds are poisoned the president is cooperating with russians is ridiculous. brian: devin nuon he necessary. it is -- nunes. interesting time. we're in middle after shut down. devin nunes. thank you very much.is t >> thank you.
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tomorrow, we'll have the very latest on the confirmation hearings of bill barr for the new attorney general. >> thank you so much for joining us. >> if you have to run from the tv, run to the radio. we have biggests coming your way. many of which i don't remember right now. good morning, everybody. we are hear for you. whaering hearing on the hill about to get underway.

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